LAB102 Neenish Tarts

LABspecial edition Neenish Tart podcast today. Join me as I go ‘bonkers’ on the drive home from work, and catch up on the latest (important) news stories to be heard on 7 News tonight. Sad news for Haiti residents too.
I also pop down to Big W to buy some xBox 360 games – I have to fill in my Uni holidays somehow!
Mong-Mongi nearly died as I headed to work this morning. Poor thing, he is really on his last wheels now. It is still stinking hot in Brisbane, and my fair delicate skin is burning like prawn on the barbie.
Do you watch The Bachelorette? – what a terrible show. 1) they are all gorgeous, and don’t need to be hooked up. 2) to take 2 people to marrying stage, & then have 1 of them dumped. So cruel.

Click here to listen to the MP3 file now

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posted by littleaussiebattler in podcast and have Comments (7)

7 Responses to “LAB102 Neenish Tarts”

  1. Archerr says:

    Nothing to do in the afternoons? What about a part time job? Then you’d have more money for xBox 360 games. hehehe or an air conditioner. :) Love ya and your show!

  2. Tarts I can accept…

    …BUT YOU ATE SKIPPY!!!!!

    Vile!

    Maybe a flamed peppercorn sauce, no, no, no, vile! :-)

    Steve in the ever so beefy UK, oooh!

  3. Andrew says:

    I had never heard of the term neenish tart before. I have seen them in bakeries but have never had one. How un-Australian am I!

    In Vic you get your registration refunded pro rata when you hand in your number plates.

  4. oh andrew. you MUST try one. today !
    my rego runs out in Feb, so I will scrap Mong-mongi the day it expires. so no refund for me. :-(

  5. We all know the year is pronounced “Twenty-ten”. The reason I hate “two-thousand AND ten” is that it’s something from the 19th Century, something someone’s grandmother would say.

    Also, when talking about normal numbers, one says, “three thousand, two-hundred sixty-six,” not “…sixty AND six.” Years are no different. I don’t know anyone under 80 who said, for example, “the year nineteen-ninety and five”. So: are Australians like 80 year olds or stuck in the 19th Century?

    So, I hate the “and”—but love you and the podcast!

  6. yeah, BUT, we would say 3 thousand, 2 hundred AND sixty-six. Like in other numbers, 1 thousand AND five, 4 hundred AND twelve etc… Like all Commonwealth countries. Oh, but I dunno about Canada; maybe they have been corrupted by USA? Hmmm. I think 20-10 does sound better for the year though, & it is shorter ;-)
    Do NZers say non-year numbers like Americans?

  7. I’ve heard some say “and”, but then tend to be elderly…

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